According to Harding, she didn't know how to start or in what direction the training should go.

At first, Harding put Violet in Pull-Ups, but, to her, it was still like buying diapers.

Besides the $25 to $40 per box expense, the Pull-Ups felt like a diaper, so Violet treated it like one. At that point, that was when she heard about Lauren Cornay and her business Tynkle Tykes.

"I came up with Tynkle Tykes, because as a mom, potty training can be very frustrating, and also it can cost a lot of money," Cornay said.

Cornay first decided to ditch the Pull-Ups and put her son in regular underwear.

"But then he was soaking through his clothes and I was doing so much laundry, " Cornay recalled.

She then created an underwear specifically for potty training.

"I get regular underwear and sew a lining in the underwear, and you just put a disposable pad inside," Cornay demonstrated. "Once the pad has been soaked or leaked on, you take it out and throw the underwear in the wash."

Cornay says this process is a faster transition, and your child could be potty-trained within two weeks.

"Instead of going from diapers to Pull-Ups to underwear, we're going from diapers to underwear," Cornay points out.

Tynkle Tykes underwear cost $10 per pair and a box of pads costs $6 for 20.